Murch sat down in front of his beer and carefully salted it. “Rollo’s okay when
you get to know him,” he said.
“Sure he is.”
“Drives a Saab.”
Dortmunder had known Rollo for years but hadn’t known about the Saab. “Is
that right?” he said.
“Used to drive a Borg-Ward. Sold it because he couldn’t get parts when they
stopped making the car.”
Kelp said, “What kind of car is that?”
“Borg-Ward. German. Same company that makes Norge refrigerators.”
“They’re American.”
“The refrigerators, yeah. The cars were German.”
Dortmunder finished his drink and reached for the bottle, and Rollo opened
the door and stuck his head in to say, “There’s an Old Crow on the rocks out
here asking for Kelp.”
“That’s him now,” Kelp said.
“A darkish fella.”
“That’s him,” Kelp said. “Send him on in.”
“Right.” Rollo gave a bartender’s glance around the table. “Everybody set?”
They all murmured.
Rollo cocked an eye at Murch. “Stan, you got enough salt?”
“Oh, sure,” Murch said. “Thanks a lot, Rollo.”
“Any time, Stan.”
Rollo went away. Dortmunder glanced at Murch, but didn’t say anything, and
a minute later a tall lean guy with dark-brown complexion and a very modest
Afro came into the room. What he looked most like was an Army second lieutenant on leave. He was nodding slightly and grinning slightly as he came in and
shut the door, and Dortmunder wondered at first if he was on something; then he
realized it was just the self-protective cool of somebody meeting a group of
people for the first time.
“Hey, Herman,” Kelp said.
“Hey,” agreed Herman quietly. He closed the door behind him and stood
there jiggling ice in his old-fashioned glass, like an early arrival at a cocktail
party.
Kelp made the introductions: “Herman X, this is Dortmunder, that’s Stan
Murch, that’s my nephew Victor.”
“How are ya.”
“Hello, Mr. X.”
Dortmunder watched Herman frown slightly at Victor and then glance at
Kelp. Kelp, however, was busy being host, saying, “Take a seat, Herman. We
were just talking about the situation.”
“That’s what I want to hear about,” Herman said. He sat down to
Dortmunder’s right. “The situation.”
Dortmunder said, “I’m surprised I don’t know you.”
Herman gave him a grin. “We probably travel in different circles.”
“I was just wondering what your experience is.”
Herman’s grin broadened into a smile. “Well, now,” he said. “One doesn’t
like to talk about one’s experiences in front of a whole room of witnesses.”
Kelp said, “Everybody’s okay in here. But, Dortmunder, Herman really does
know his business.”
Dortmunder continued to frown at Herman. It seemed to him there was
something of the dilettante about this guy. Your ordinary run-of-the-mill heavy
could be a dilettante, hut a lockman was supposed to be serious, he was
supposed to be a man with a craft, with expertise.
Herman glanced around the table with an ironic smile, then shrugged, sipped
at his drink and said, “Well, last night I helped take away the Justice receipts.”
Victor, looking startled, said, “From the Bureau?”
Herman looked baffled. “From the bureau? It was on tables; they were
counting it.”
Kelp said, “That was you? I read about that in the paper.”
So had Dortmunder. He said, “What locks did you open?”
“None,” Herman said. “It wasn’t that kind of a job.”
Victor, still trying to work it all out, said, “You mean down at Foley Square?”
This time, Herman’s frown was deep and somewhat hostile. “Well, the FBI is
down there,” he said.
“The Bureau,” said Victor.
Kelp said, “Later, Victor. You’re confused.”
“They don’t have any receipts at the Bureau,” Victor said. “I should know. I
was an agent for twenty-one months.”
Herman was on his feet, the chair tipping over behind him. “What’s going on
here?”
“It’s all right,” Kelp said, fast and soothing. He patted the air in a gesture of
reassurance. “It’s all right. They fired him.”
Herman, in his mistrust, was trying to look in seven directions at once; his eyes
kept almost crossing. “If this is entrapment-” he said.
“They fired him,” Kelp insisted. “Didn’t they, Victor?”
“Well,” Victor said, “we sort of agreed to disagree. I wasn’t exactly fired
precisely, not exactly.”
Herman had focused on Victor again, and now he said, “You mean it was
political?”
Before Victor could answer, Kelp said smoothly, “Something like that. Yeah,
it was political, wasn’t it, Victor?”
“Uh. Sure, yeah. You could call it … I guess you could call it that.”
Herman shrugged his shoulders inside his sports jacket, to adjust it. Then he
sat down again with a relieved smile, saying, “You had me going there for a
minute.”
Dortmunder had learned patience at great cost. The trial and error of life
among human beings had taught him that whenever a bunch of them began to
jump up and down and shout at cross-purposes, the only thing a sane man could
do was sit back and let them sort it out for themselves. No matter how long it
took. The alternative was to try to attract their attention, either with explanations
of the misunderstanding or with a return to the original topic of conversation, and
to make that attempt meant that sooner or later you too would be jumping up
and down and shouting at cross-purposes. Patience, patience; at the very worst,
they would finally wear themselves out.
Now, he looked around the table at everybody smiling in new
comprehension-Murch was salting his beer again-and then he said, “What
we had in mind for this job was a lockman.”
“That’s what I am,” Herman said. “Last night, I was just filling in. You know,
helping out. Usually I’m a lockman.”
“For instance.”
“For instance the People’s Cooperative Supermarket on Sutter Avenue
about three weeks ago. The Lenox Avenue office of the Tender Loving Care
Loan Company a couple weeks before that. Smilin Sam Tahachapee’s safe in
the horse room behind the Fifth of November Bar and Grill on Linden
Boulevard two days before that. The Balmy Breeze Hotel safe in Atlantic City
during the Retired Congressmen’s Convention the week before that. The Open
Hand Check Cashing Agency on Jerome Avenue the-”
“You don’t need work,” Kelp said. He sounded awed. “You got all the work
you can handle.”
“Not to mention money,” Murch said.
Herman shook his head with a bitter smile. “The fact is,” he said, “I’m broke.
I really need a score.”
Dortmunder said, “You must run through it pretty quick.”
“Those are Movement jobs,” Herman said. “I don’t get to keep any of it.”
This time Victor was the only one who understood. “Ah,” he said. “You’re
helping to finance their schemes.”
“Like the free-lunch program,” Herman said.
Kelp said, “Wait a minute. These are Movement jobs, so you don’t get to
keep the money. What does that mean exactly? Movement jobs. You mean
they’re like for practice? You send the money back?”
Victor said, “He gives the money to the organization he belongs to.” Mildly,
he said to Herman, “Which movement do you belong to, exactly?”
“One of them,” Herman said. To Kelp he said, “I don’t set any of those things
up. These people that I believe in-” with a glance at Victor-“that your
nephew would know about, they set them up, and they put together the group
that does the job. What we say is, we’re liberating the money.”
“I think of it the other way around,” Kelp said. “I think of it that I’m capturing
the money.”
Dortmunder said, “What was the last job you did on your own? Where you
got to keep the loot?”
“About a year ago,” Herman said. “A bank in St. Louis.”
“Who’d you work with?”
“Stan Devers and Mort Kobler. George Cathcart drove.”
“I know George,” Kelp said.
Dortmunder knew Kobler. “All right,” he said.
“Now,” Herman said, “let’s talk about you boys. Not what you’ve done, I’ll
take Kelp’s word for that. What you want to do.”
Dortmunder took a deep breath. He wasn’t happy about this moment.
“We’re going to steal a bank,” he said.
Herman looked puzzled. “Rob a bank?”
“Steal a bank.” To Kelp he said, “You tell him.”
Kelp told him. At first Herman sort of grinned, as though waiting for the punch
line. Then, for a while, he frowned, as though suspecting he was surrounded by
mental cases. And finally he looked interested, as though the idea had caught his
fancy. At the end he said, “S0 I can take my time. I can even work in daylight if
I want.”
“Sure,” Kelp said.
Herman nodded. He looked at Dortmunder and said, “Why is it still just a
maybe?”
“We don’t have any place to put it,” Dortmunder said. “Also, we have to get
wheels for it.”
“I’m working on that,” Murch said. “But I may need some help.”
“A whole bank,” Herman said. He beamed. “We’re gonna liberate a whole
bank.”
Kelp said, “We’re gonna capture a whole bank.”
“It comes to the same thing,” Herman told him. “Believe me, it comes to the